- Fri Dec 10, 2010 12:04 pm
#115312
Hello, and thanks in advance for any responses!
I attended SFE's stenciling class, and came out with an Arduino Pro 238 5V/16MHz fully tested. I only recently got around to buying the FTDI Basic 5V board.
So... I know the board works, because it was tested before my eyes at SparkFun and because I can use my Uno (hooking up all the appropriate tx, rx, power leads) to program it. When trying to upload a sketch, I get the error message below:
avrdude: stk500_getsync(): not in sync: resp=0x00
avrdude: stk500_disable(): protocol error, expect=0x14, resp=0x51
In reading up on it, it seems to be a very hard-to-diagnose problem. I'm running Arduino 0021, Windows 7 Enterprise 64bit, and have checked that I've got the correct COM and board (Arduino Duemilanove or Nano w/ 328) selected. I've updated my drivers using the ones from ftdichip.com and checked that the COM port is using 57600 baud rate (as found the boards.txt file).
Please help me get this working, because once I can program using the FTDI breakout board I can give away my Uno to a friend so that he can get started with microcontrollers, too!
I attended SFE's stenciling class, and came out with an Arduino Pro 238 5V/16MHz fully tested. I only recently got around to buying the FTDI Basic 5V board.
So... I know the board works, because it was tested before my eyes at SparkFun and because I can use my Uno (hooking up all the appropriate tx, rx, power leads) to program it. When trying to upload a sketch, I get the error message below:
avrdude: stk500_getsync(): not in sync: resp=0x00
avrdude: stk500_disable(): protocol error, expect=0x14, resp=0x51
In reading up on it, it seems to be a very hard-to-diagnose problem. I'm running Arduino 0021, Windows 7 Enterprise 64bit, and have checked that I've got the correct COM and board (Arduino Duemilanove or Nano w/ 328) selected. I've updated my drivers using the ones from ftdichip.com and checked that the COM port is using 57600 baud rate (as found the boards.txt file).
Please help me get this working, because once I can program using the FTDI breakout board I can give away my Uno to a friend so that he can get started with microcontrollers, too!
Last edited by mtmentat on Mon Dec 13, 2010 4:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.